public abstract class IntBuffer extends Buffer implements Comparable
This class is provided as part of the JSR 239 NIO Buffer
building block. It is a subset of the
java.nio.IntBuffer
class in Java(TM) Standard Edition
version 1.4.2. Differences are noted in bold italic.
The class documentation may make reference to classes that are not
present in the building block.
I/O channels, marking and resetting, and read-only buffers
are not supported. Allocation of non-direct int buffers,
compaction, and duplication are not supported.
The following methods are omitted:
IntBuffer allocate(int capacity)
IntBuffer compact()
IntBuffer duplicate()
Buffer mark()
Buffer reset()
boolean isReadOnly()
IntBuffer asReadOnlyBuffer()
This class defines four categories of operations upon int buffers:
Absolute and relative get
and
put
methods that read and write
single ints;
Relative bulk get
methods that transfer contiguous sequences of ints from this buffer
into an array;
Relative bulk put
methods that transfer contiguous sequences of ints from an
int array or some other int
buffer into this buffer; and
Methods for compacting, duplicating, and slicing
an int buffer. JSR 239 does
not support compacting and duplicating buffers.
Int buffers can be created either by allocation, which
allocates space for the buffer's content, by wrapping
an existing int array into a buffer,
or by creating a view of
an existing byte buffer. JSR 239 supports allocation of
ByteBuffer
s only.
Like a byte buffer, an int buffer is either direct or non-direct. A
int buffer created via the wrap methods of this class will
be non-direct. An int buffer created as a view of a byte buffer will
be direct if, and only if, the byte buffer itself is direct. Whether or not
an int buffer is direct may be determined by invoking the isDirect
method.
Methods in this class that do not otherwise have a value to return are specified to return the buffer upon which they are invoked. This allows method invocations to be chained.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
int[] |
array()
Returns the int array that backs this
buffer (optional operation).
|
int |
arrayOffset()
Returns the offset within this buffer's backing array of the
first element of the buffer (optional
operation).
|
int |
compareTo(java.lang.Object ob)
Compares this buffer to another.
|
boolean |
equals(java.lang.Object ob)
Tells whether or not this buffer is equal to another object.
|
abstract int |
get()
Relative get method.
|
abstract int |
get(int index)
Absolute get method.
|
IntBuffer |
get(int[] dst)
Relative bulk get method.
|
IntBuffer |
get(int[] dst,
int offset,
int length)
Relative bulk get method.
|
boolean |
hasArray()
Tells whether or not this buffer is backed by an accessible
int array.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns the current hash code of this buffer.
|
abstract boolean |
isDirect()
Tells whether or not this int buffer is direct.
|
abstract IntBuffer |
put(int i)
Relative put method (optional
operation).
|
IntBuffer |
put(int[] src)
Relative bulk put method (optional operation).
|
IntBuffer |
put(int[] src,
int offset,
int length)
Relative bulk put method (optional
operation).
|
IntBuffer |
put(IntBuffer src)
Relative bulk put method (optional
operation).
|
abstract IntBuffer |
put(int index,
int i)
Absolute put method (optional operation).
|
abstract IntBuffer |
slice()
Creates a new int buffer whose content is a shared
subsequence of this buffer's content.
|
java.lang.String |
toString()
Returns a string summarizing the state of this buffer.
|
static IntBuffer |
wrap(int[] array)
Wraps an int array into a buffer.
|
static IntBuffer |
wrap(int[] array,
int offset,
int length)
Wraps an int array into a buffer.
|
public static IntBuffer wrap(int[] array, int offset, int length)
The new buffer will be backed by the given int array;
that is, modifications to the buffer will cause the array to be modified
and vice versa. The new buffer's capacity will be
array.length, its position will be offset, its limit
will be offset + length, and its mark will be undefined. Its
backing array
will be the given array, and
its
array offset
will be zero.
array
- The array that will back the new bufferoffset
- The offset of the subarray to be used; must be non-negative and
no larger than array.length. The new buffer's position
will be set to this value.length
- The length of the subarray to be used;
must be non-negative and no larger than
array.length - offset.
The new buffer's limit will be set to offset + length.java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
- If the preconditions on the offset and length
parameters do not holdpublic static IntBuffer wrap(int[] array)
The new buffer will be backed by the given int array;
that is, modifications to the buffer will cause the array to be modified
and vice versa. The new buffer's capacity and limit will be
array.length, its position will be zero, and its mark will be
undefined. Its backing array
will be the
given array, and its
array offset
will
be zero.
array
- The array that will back this bufferpublic abstract IntBuffer slice()
The content of the new buffer will start at this buffer's current position. Changes to this buffer's content will be visible in the new buffer, and vice versa; the two buffers' position, limit, and mark values will be independent. JSR 239 does not support the mark.
The new buffer's position will be zero, its capacity and its limit will be the number of ints remaining in this buffer, and its mark will be undefined. The new buffer will be direct if, and only if, this buffer is direct, and it will be read-only if, and only if, this buffer is read-only. JSR 239 does not support the mark or read-only buffers.
public abstract int get()
BufferUnderflowException
- If the buffer's current
position is not smaller than its limit.public abstract IntBuffer put(int i)
Writes the given int into this buffer at the current position, and then increments the position.
i
- The int to be written.BufferOverflowException
- If this buffer's current
position is not smaller than its limit.ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.public abstract int get(int index)
index
- The index from which the int will be read.java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
- If index is negative
or not smaller than the buffer's limit.public abstract IntBuffer put(int index, int i)
Writes the given int into this buffer at the given index.
index
- The index at which the int will be written.i
- The int value to be written.java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
- If index is negative
or not smaller than the buffer's limit.ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.public IntBuffer get(int[] dst, int offset, int length)
This method transfers ints from this buffer into the
given destination array. If there are fewer ints
remaining in the buffer than are required to satisfy the
request, that is, if
length > remaining(),
then no ints are transferred and a BufferUnderflowException
is thrown.
Otherwise, this method copies length ints from this buffer into the given array, starting at the current position of this buffer and at the given offset in the array. The position of this buffer is then incremented by length.
In other words, an invocation of this method of the form src.get(dst, off, len) has exactly the same effect as the loop
for (int i = off; i < off + len; i++) dst[i] = src.get();except that it first checks that there are sufficient ints in this buffer and it is potentially much more efficient.
dst
- The array into which ints are to be written.offset
- The offset within the array of the first
int to be written; must be non-negative and no larger
than dst.length.length
- The maximum number of ints to be written
to the given array; must be non-negative and no larger than
dst.length - offset.BufferUnderflowException
- If there are fewer than
dst.length ints remaining in this buffer.java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
- If the preconditions on the
offset and length parameters do not hold.public IntBuffer get(int[] dst)
This method transfers ints from this buffer into the given destination array. An invocation of this method of the form src.get(a) behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
src.get(a, 0, a.length)
BufferUnderflowException
- If there are fewer than
length ints remaining in this buffer.public IntBuffer put(IntBuffer src)
This method transfers the ints remaining in the
given source buffer into this buffer. If there are more
ints remaining in the source buffer than in this buffer,
that is, if
src.remaining() > remaining(),
then no ints are transferred and a BufferOverflowException
is thrown.
Otherwise, this method copies n = src.remaining() ints from the given buffer into this buffer, starting at each buffer's current position. The positions of both buffers are then incremented by n.
In other words, an invocation of this method of the form dst.put(src) has exactly the same effect as the loop
while (src.hasRemaining()) dst.put(src.get());except that it first checks that there is sufficient space in this buffer and it is potentially much more efficient.
src
- The source buffer from which ints are to be
read; must not be this buffer.BufferOverflowException
- If there is insufficient space
in this buffer for the remaining ints in the source
buffer.java.lang.IllegalArgumentException
- If the source buffer is this buffer.ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.public IntBuffer put(int[] src, int offset, int length)
This method transfers ints into this buffer from the
given source array. If there are more ints to be copied
from the array than remain in this buffer, that is, if
length > remaining(),
then no ints are transferred and a BufferOverflowException
is thrown.
Otherwise, this method copies length ints from the given array into this buffer, starting at the given offset in the array and at the current position of this buffer. The position of this buffer is then incremented by length.
In other words, an invocation of this method of the form dst.put(src, off, len) has exactly the same effect as the loop
for (int i = off; i < off + len; i++) dst.put(a[i]);except that it first checks that there is sufficient space in this buffer and it is potentially much more efficient.
src
- The array from which ints are to be read.offset
- The offset within the array of the first
int to be read; must be non-negative and no larger than
array.length.length
- The number of ints to be read from the
given array; must be non-negative and no larger than
array.length - offset.BufferOverflowException
- If there is insufficient space
in this buffer.java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
- If the preconditions on the
offset and length parameters do not hold.ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.public final IntBuffer put(int[] src)
This method transfers the entire content of the given source int array into this buffer. An invocation of this method of the form dst.put(a) behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
dst.put(a, 0, a.length)
BufferOverflowException
- If there is insufficient space
in this buffer.ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.public final boolean hasArray()
If this method returns true then the array
and arrayOffset
methods
may safely be invoked.
public final int[] array()
Modifications to this buffer's content will cause the returned array's content to be modified, and vice versa.
Invoke the hasArray
method before
invoking this method in order to ensure that this buffer has an
accessible backing array.
ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.UnsupportedOperationException
- If this buffer is not
backed by an accessible array.public final int arrayOffset()
If this buffer is backed by an array then buffer position p corresponds to array index p + arrayOffset().
Invoke the hasArray
method before
invoking this method in order to ensure that this buffer has an
accessible backing array.
ReadOnlyBufferException
- If this buffer is
read-only. JSR 239 does not support read-only buffer or
the ReadOnlyBufferException
class.UnsupportedOperationException
- If this buffer is not
backed by an accessible array.public abstract boolean isDirect()
public java.lang.String toString()
toString
in class java.lang.Object
public int hashCode()
The hash code of an int buffer depends only upon its remaining elements; that is, upon the elements from position() up to, and including, the element at limit() - 1.
Because buffer hash codes are content-dependent, it is inadvisable to use buffers as keys in hash maps or similar data structures unless it is known that their contents will not change.
hashCode
in class java.lang.Object
public boolean equals(java.lang.Object ob)
Two int buffers are equal if, and only if,
They have the same element type,
They have the same number of remaining elements, and
The two sequences of remaining elements, considered independently of their starting positions, are pointwise equal.
An int buffer is not equal to any other type of object.
equals
in class java.lang.Object
ob
- The object to which this buffer is to be compared.public int compareTo(java.lang.Object ob)
Two int buffers are compared by comparing their sequences of remaining elements lexicographically, without regard to the starting position of each sequence within its corresponding buffer.
An int buffer is not comparable to any other type of object.
compareTo
in interface Comparable
ob
- the Object to be compared.java.lang.ClassCastException
- If the argument is not an int buffer.Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
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